Felix John Taylor is a librarian at The Queen’s College, Oxford. He completed his PhD at St Hugh’s College, Oxford, on Welsh mythology and folklore in twentieth-century literature, and while there oversaw a reading group devoted to the occult in literature. He has previously held positions at the Bodleian Modern Languages and Arts & Archaeology libraries, and currently writes for the Literary Review.
'A fascinating tour of the explosion of ritual magic in the late 19th and early 20th centuries and the extraordinary associated flowering of creativity and imagination that shaped the way we think about the occult today. Esoteric symbolism, solemn costumed ceremonies, sex scandals, occultist infighting, astral projection sessions in the London suburbs and alchemist laboratories hidden in country vicarages ... this vivid and enthralling history of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn summons it all back to life with a true medium's art' - Fiona Robertson, author of 'Stonelands' 'A lucid and useful study of the relationship between the modern ceremonial magic of the Golden Dawn tradition and the literary arts, showing the manner in which the former stimulated and transmuted into the latter' - Ronald Hutton, author of 'Pagan Britain'